jon_chaisson: (Default)
...until we officially move into our new place! I'm still trying to wrap my head around that. It's not helping that I feel like I've been putting off all the packing even though I've done quite a large amount of it (and tossing/donating) already. It's also not helping that the Day Job has had some of its busiest days in months these last couple of weeks. I'm deliberately running on half-speed to conserve energy -- I'm not as fast at work so I can keep some of that oomph to move boxes and bins over to the new place.

We've also been doing a lot of shopping lately, buying stuff for the new place. We've even gotten ourselves a membership to Costco after all these years! Not that we're about to buy Armageddon Preparation Size boxes of cereal mind you, just looking for good deals on things we frequently use and need like household stuff. We're also buying things other than bookshelves (heh) at Ikea for storage modules we will need. We're trying not to go overboard considering we're moving into a slightly smaller space and there's only so much space for storage, but being smart about the space we do have is important. I will be heading to said Costco later today to pick up some storage shelves for the garage.

And INTERNETS! As of yesterday we are all wired up at the new place so that's one more thing to cross off our to-do list. Yay!

I am a little worried about some of the stuff we're getting rid of, though I'm hoping that won't be too much of a problem. We'll be getting rid of our old Dyson vacuum cleaner which we've had for almost 20 years that STILL runs perfectly (not bad for a refurb at that) which I'm sure a neighbor will yoink. The living room couch is going to be tricky, though. It's the one we bought from Home Reserve, known for their really good durable furniture that comes in boxes that you put together yourselves. I want to see if one of our neighbors wants it first before I put it up on FB Marketplace. I'd rather someone take it because aside from a bit of wear and sun fade, it's still in great condition, but if we have to toss it, at least it's gotten sixteen years of use!

I'll be honest, what's bothering me the most is that I'm barely getting any writing work done. I'd packed all my notebooks and brought them over to the new place so I haven't done any journaling in ages. I might squeeze in a few pages of revision and editing on the trilogy remaster, but that's about it. I just haven't had the time. I'd expected this and I'm using the time as a bit of a vacation from all that, but I am SO itching to get back to it once we've moved.

On that note, I have today and tomorrow off and I'd better get moving. Still using pockets of time to rest and relax, but I still have a lot to do.
jon_chaisson: (Groucho Marx)
I was joking with [livejournal.com profile] emmalyon the other day that John Ringo probably would be appalled at my trilogy, because it contains the following:

--a female main character trying to keep her sanity
--a teenage girl as an important relationship character
--the two above characters are sisters getting over the loss of their parents
--a male main character dealing with some pretty deep emotional and spiritual inner demons
--a few stun guns, but no lethal shooting
--some pretty deep metaphysical shit going down
--family relations
--budding relationships
--hinted-at same-sex relationships (platonic and otherwise) (no sex scenes though)
--talk about religion, belief, and spirituality (but NOT talking about Christianity, God, or any other current major religions)
--a few deaths, but offscreen
--no sex scenes, but a few scenes of flirting, hugging, tenderness and other non-sexual emotions of love

...to name a few things.

Per Mr. Ringo, and per Paul Cook over at Amazing Stories, since my trilogy contains the above and hardly any Manly Male Acts of Testosterone-Fueled Masculine Manliness (y'know, unbridled sex with supermodels, getting drunk, witnessing and/or causing bloody deaths, Blowing Shit Up, vengeance, Blowing More Shit Up, men in uniform, USA USA USA, flagwaving, saving the day Rambo-style, having that "One man..." gravelly-voiced narrator do the trailer for my Michael Bay-directed film (yes, I know he's dead, work with me here), blowing even more shit up, having the lead character have a horrible relationship with his ex-wife because he's just That Much of a Bastard, drinking rotgut gin at some shitty bar in some metropolis at three in the morning, smoking stogies, and all that other crap), it looks like I'll have to turn in my BroCred Cardâ„¢ because I haven't even gotten CLOSE to writing Manly Science Fucking Goddamn Fiction. Apparently I'm on the verge of writing romantic fantasy. I may as well just start wearing dresses and putting on make-up, right?

Or, y'know, I could just laugh it off. I refuse to be pigeonholed like that. And I'm totally behind any other writer who feels the same way I do.

So yeah. Mr. Ringo, Mr. Cook, y'all can cool off a bit.


[More on this later...I have some revising to do of said pansy-ass trilogy. ;) ]
jon_chaisson: (Default)
distraction1

[Picture borrowed from timkla.wordpress.com.]

Yes, yes...I know I'm two days behind now. I wholly blame myself for that. Time to catch up.

On that note, I'd originally thought of talking about distraction and how it impedes my writing work. I thought about what exactly distracted me, especially lately. Is it my ever-constant fiddling with my music collection? Is it my occasional FreeCell games? But the more I thought about it, I realized there's really only one true distraction for me: the internet.

It's weird, really. I never thought I'd get sucked in this far, and now I'm daily trying to force myself off the damn thing, especially when I really need to be writing. It wasn't like this in the past.

But let's be honest--when my family first went online in the late 90s, it was through AOL and other webservices, and we were using dial-up and the speed was slow as hell. And even into the 2000s when we finally got broadband and all the PCs in the house were connected, I didn't get distracted. Maybe it was that there were far fewer social networks out there as there are now, or at least none that I cared to join. Besides, I had a trilogy I had to write, and I holed myself up downstairs in the basement on a nightly basis. And even then, I was more focused on the writing than I was going online and looking up pointless things. I did occasionally go online in the Belfry, but usually to look up information for my writing.

That seems to be the rub, right there: Social networking.

I never used to be this bad. Back in the 90s, we had the bbs--the bulletin board site, which was set up sort of like today's Reddit tree, but without the inserted sub-items. Very linear and lifeless, and catered pretty much to specific groups and subjects. Then there was the webforum, which you still see (usually on tech sites like C/Net and the like), but are rarely used as a social spot anymore.

If I'm not mistaken, LiveJournal popped up sometime around 2002 or so, and I joined a few years later in 2004. I have a permanent account which pretty much paid itself off quite a few years ago. This is probably where I first enjoyed a social network, as I was able to connect with a lot of my friends who were not nearby, and I was also able to meet new people as well. It is sad that it seems to be dying a slow death, at least here in the US, as I've depended on it for a number of years, especially when I moved out here to SF.

I don't even remember exactly what caused the first major exodus from LJ--I think it was some Terms of Service ballyhoo--and at the time I felt it really petty that a number of people were jumping ship so quickly. At the same time, however, I noticed that a lot of these same people were also leaving or at least backing away because they'd run out of things to say on their blogs. I guess the diary aspect of blogging about your day wore thin after awhile. I remember a lot of people leaving or abandoning LJ because they just didn't have anything to say.

On the same token, however, I noticed that many of these same people were heading over to Facebook, and Twitter shortly after. Maybe it wasn't that they didn't have anything to say...more like they wanted to say something more immediate. Something off the top of their head, rather than a longer blog post. There was also more interactivity--instead of posting an entry and waiting for someone to answer, you were instead talking pseudo-realtime through short back-and-forth entries.

What's interesting about all of this is that, in the ever-changing move from one network to another, a user who wants to keep in touch really does need to have the ability to juggle multiple platforms. I came to this realization about this time last year, when I'd noticed I had all these different sites: three different sort-of-active LJs, a few inactive LJs, a Dreamwidth account, Facebook, Twitter, and a WordPress site. It was too much! I needed to pare down, and quick. I got rid of the inactive LJs, stopped using the Dreamwidth account (which I still have but don't use at present), and my remaining blogs have become subject-specific. This leaves Facebook and Twitter as the purely social sites for me.

I've soured on Facebook for various reasons--not so much because of the people on it, or the things that get posted, or the constant site changes, but the general vibe. It just feels...it's hard to describe, but it just feels very shallow, like there's not much emotion to it. Just a lot of reactive emotion but not much creativity. Which pretty much keeps me on Twitter. Twitter's like a nonstop silly game of Exquisite Corpse, where users riff off each other, comment on each other's witticisms, and generally have a lot of fun. I think that's the best part of being relegated to 140 characters--you have to think about what you're about to type, to whom, and how. I also love the fact that the hashtag is totally used for the wrong reasons--it's supposed to be a tag, but it's quite often used as sarcasm or a silly aside. And it refreshes at an alarming rate. It's addictive.

And this, my friends, is why I need to relearn how to avoid distraction!

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